Square for Restaurants starts at $0/month if you use Square Point of Sale Free — which is why it's the default for scared first-time owners. But "free" is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence. Once you need the things every modern restaurant needs, the true cost climbs fast.
We've helped dozens of Square users migrate to a consolidated platform over the past year. Almost all of them started with "Square is free." Almost none of them were actually paying zero. Here's what a full audit of Square's restaurant stack looks like in 2026.
The tiers, briefly
- Free: $0/month. Single location, basic POS. Processing: 2.6% + $0.10 in-person, 2.9% + $0.30 online.
- Plus: $69/month per location. Adds online ordering, team management, course firing, shift scheduling.
- Premium: custom pricing starting ~$165/month. Lower processing rates, phone support, dedicated account manager.
The Free tier is real, but the moment you need online ordering (which is week one for most concepts), you're on Plus at $69/month. That's the real starting line.
The add-ons that stack on top
Square's catalog looks modular and affordable until you realize how many modules a working restaurant needs. As of early 2026:
| Module | Monthly |
|---|---|
| Square for Restaurants Plus (per location) | $69 |
| Square Online (branded site, above Plus features) | $12–$72 |
| Square Marketing (email + SMS) | $15–$105 based on list size |
| Square Loyalty | $45/month (up to 500 active members; scales up) |
| Square Gift Cards | $0 software + 2.9% + $0.30 on digital card loads |
| Square Payroll | $35/month + $6/employee |
| Square KDS | $20/month per device |
| Square Kiosk | $30/month per kiosk (plus hardware) |
| Square Appointments (if catering) | $29–$79/month |
A restaurant running Plus + Online + Marketing + Loyalty + KDS (2) + Kiosk (1) lands around $264/month in software, before processing.
Processing is where the real bill lives
Square's published rates are among the most transparent in the industry, which is to its credit. But transparent doesn't mean cheap:
- In-person: 2.6% + $0.10
- Online: 2.9% + $0.30
- Keyed-in: 3.5% + $0.15
On $80K/month with a typical 70/30 in-person/online mix, that's roughly $2,250/month in processing. Add the $264 in software and you're at $2,500+ before hardware and before any payroll add-ons.
Where Square genuinely wins
Not every restaurant should migrate off Square. It's actually the right choice in three scenarios:
- Very low volume (under $25K/month): the free tier is genuinely free, processing fees stay modest, and the simplicity is a real asset.
- Pop-ups, catering, food trucks: Square's hardware flexibility and instant onboarding are hard to beat.
- Concepts with no kitchen complexity: coffee shops, bakeries, ice cream. Modifiers, coursing, and kitchen printing don't matter.
If you're running a real full-service restaurant, a fast-casual concept with a kitchen line, or anything with multiple service channels (dine-in, takeout, delivery, catering) — Square starts fighting you.
Where Square starts fighting you
Modifiers and coursing
Square's modifier system is workable for a small menu but gets painful fast. Nested modifiers (e.g., "add protein" → "chicken or salmon" → "rare, medium, well") require workarounds. Coursing and fire-timing on the kitchen side is bolted-on rather than native.
Reporting depth
Square's reports are fine for "how much did we sell today." They're weak for "which server upsells wine the most?", "what's my dessert attachment rate by daypart?", or "which menu items are dragging margin down?" These are the questions that actually drive operator decisions, and Square requires you to export to spreadsheets or buy third-party tools to answer them.
Multi-location
Square Plus is priced per location. A three-location restaurant is paying $207/month in software alone before any modules. At the point you're scaling, the per-location pricing starts to sting.
The all-in-one comparison
The reason platforms like Labrador exist is that most independents end up needing 8–12 vendors if they build their stack module-by-module, and each module has its own price, its own login, and its own integration risk. A consolidated platform that bundles POS, online ordering, kiosk, SMS, loyalty, AI phone, and payments as one bill is usually cheaper than the sum of the Square modules — before accounting for the time savings of not stitching systems together.
Our savings calculator runs the actual math based on your volume.
Bottom line
Square for Restaurants is a great starting point and a dangerous ending point. If you're under $25K/month or running a pop-up, stay. If you're running a real restaurant and you've started stacking modules, add up what you're paying all-in — then compare it to platforms that bundle the same functionality as one bill.